Torture Alleged at Ministry Site Outside Baghdad

By JOHN F. BURNS

New York Times

November 15, 2005

BAGHDAD, Iraq,
Nov. 15 - Iraq's government said Tuesday that it had ordered an urgent
investigation of allegations that many of the 173 detainees American troops
discovered over the weekend in the basement of an Interior Ministry building in
a Baghdad suburb had been tortured by their Iraqi captors. A senior Iraqi
official who visited the detainees said two appeared paralyzed and others had
some of the skin peeled off their bodies by their abusers.

Prime Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari held a hurriedly organized news conference
to announce the official inquiry. He also said there would be a second
investigation, including a comprehensive count of the thousands held in Iraqi
jails, to determine whether there was a wider pattern of abuse, as many
opponents of his government have claimed. He said the detainees had been moved
to another location and had been given all necessary medical care.

A joint statement by the American Embassy and the United States military
command called the situation "totally unacceptable" and said American officials
"agree with Iraq's leaders that mistreatment of detainees will not be
tolerated."

The discovery of what appeared to have been a secret torture center created a
new aura of crisis for American officials and Iraqi politicians who hold power
in the Shiite-led transitional government. For many Iraqis, the episode carried
heavy overtones of the brutality associated with Saddam
Hussein and his Sunni-dominated government.

Ominously, amid rising sectarianism here, Interior Ministry officials
reported that the abused detainees appeared to have been mostly Sunni Arabs, and
their abusers Shiite police officers loyal to the notorious Badr Organization, a
militia with close links to Iran.

For American officials in Iraq, still laboring under the shadow of the Abu
Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal and other allegations of mistreatment of
prisoners, the new allegations came at a particularly inopportune moment.

American efforts are currently centered on national elections scheduled for
Dec. 15 for a full, four-year government. What American troops found in the
government building appeared laden with potential for aggravating Sunni-Shiite
tensions just when American officials have been working hard to draw wavering
Sunni groups into the political process.

The detention center was discovered by chance late on Sunday evening, when
troops of the Third Infantry Division, investigating a mother's complaint about
a missing 15-year-old boy, led Iraqi soldiers in forcing their way past Interior
Ministry guards at the building in Jadriya, a densely populated suburb less than
a mile south across the Tigris River from the Green Zone compound that is the
seat of American and Iraqi power.

Only a half-mile further south is the headquarters of the Shiite religious
party that is the parent of the Badr group, the Supreme Council for the Islamic
Revolution in Iraq, known as Sciri, which has wide influence in Jadriya.

American officers said the guards had told them that only 40 men were held in
the building.

At his news conference, Mr. Jaafari said the troops who stormed the building
found "signs of malnourishment" among the 173 men and teenage boys, and "there
was some talk that they had been tortured."

He said he had appointed a deputy prime minister, Rowsh Shaways, who is
Kurdish, to head an inquiry, and ordered him to report within two weeks. "We
want to know how this was allowed to happen, and how things reached this point,"
Mr. Jaafari said. The wider investigation, into jail conditions across the
country, will be led by "ministers and other figures," he said.

An Interior Ministry statement said flatly that torture had occurred and that
"instruments of torture," which it did not describe, were found in the building.

The ministry's under secretary for security, Maj. Gen. Hussein Kamal, was
similarly blunt. "They were being abused," he told Reuters. "This is totally
unacceptable treatment and it is denounced by the minister and everyone in
Iraq."

In a CNN interview, he was more graphic. "I saw signs of physical abuse by
brutal beating, one or two detainees were paralyzed and some had skin peeling
off various parts of their bodies," he said.

The dismay among American officers involved in the operations on Sunday was
evident from a report on Tuesday in The Los Angeles Times, which on Monday
carried the first report of the raid in Jadriya. In its report on Tuesday, the
newspaper quoted Brig. Gen. Karl Horst of the Third Infantry Division, the
commander of the raid, as saying that there would be more operations directed at
uncovering secret detention centers. "We're going to hit every single one of
them," he said.

Since the Jaafari government took office in May and gave the post of interior
minister to Bayan Jabr, a former leader of the Badr militia, it has been dogged
by allegations that Shiite religious militiamen have infiltrated the country's
110,000-member police force and acted as a spearhead of revenge against Sunnis,
locking up thousands in secret detention centers, and forming police death
squads that single out Sunnis.

Mr. Jabr has denied the allegations, describing them as Sunni insurgent
propaganda intended to discredit the country's first Shiite-majority government.
He has also pointed to the widespread sectarian killings carried out by Sunni
insurgents, who have attacked thousands of Shiites in mosques and bazaars and
have carried out group killings of kidnapped Shiites, including police
officers.

Mr. Jaafari acted after meetings with the American ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay
Khalilzad, and with the American military commander, Gen. George W. Casey Jr.,
according to accounts by American officials.

The disclosure of the direct American role in hastening Mr. Jaafari into
action was a break from the usual pattern in the 17 months since Iraq regained
formal sovereignty, a period in which American officials have been assiduous in
exerting their influence behind the scenes. Coupled with the uncompromising tone
of the American statement, it left little doubt that the Americans saw the
episode as one with dire implications for the American enterprise here.

"The alleged mistreatment of detainees and the inhumane conditions at an
Iraqi Ministry of Interior detention facility is very serious, and totally
unacceptable," the American statement said.

Prisoners Allege Use of Lions

The New York Times

WASHINGTON, Nov. 15 - Army officials said Tuesday that they were looking into
claims by two former Iraqi detainees that they had been put into cages holding
lions to terrify them during interrogations in 2003.

Thahe Mohammed Sabar said in a statement released by the American Civil
Liberties Union that soldiers had pushed him and Sherzad Khalid, a friend, into
the cage, then pulled them out when a lion moved toward him. Mr. Khalid said
soldiers had forced him into the cages after repeatedly asking where to find
Saddam Hussein and unconventional weapons.

The two are among eight plaintiffs in a lawsuit filed in March by the
American Civil Liberties Union and Human Rights First against Mr. Rumsfeld,
alleging they were subjected to sexual abuse, mock executions and other torture.

Omar al-Neami contributed reporting from Baghdad for this
article, and an Iraqi staff member of The New York Times from
Kirkuk.